Friday, February 09, 2018

Don't start a new book! Finish the old one!

I recently did a Skype session with a writing
group, and I started it as I always start a workshop, with these questions:

1. The genre of your
WIP (Work in Progress) 2. The premise
of your book - the story in one or two sentences.

3 . A list of TEN books and films (at least fivefilms)in your genre that are somewhat similar to
your book structurally.

Just that bit of information on my audience
or students helps me focus the session or class so that everyone gets the most
out of our time together. And you know what I find over and over?

Very few people can tell me about their ONE
book.

Because most of the participants have five, six,
seven, even eight (I’m dying here…) book
or story projects going at once.

Oh. My. God.

Over the years I have been astonished at how many people in my workshops have multiple
projects in various stages of completion. It's not astonishing at all that most
of these people remain unpublished. Because published authors are writers who
suck it up and FINISH their books. They COMMIT. They deal with the reality of
what they have written instead of the fantasy of what they thought they were
writing. They develop the Teflon skin that allows them to put their work out
there to be criticized—and yes, rejected. Lots of rejection.Get free Story Structure extras and movie breakdowns
Some of these unfinished projects will never be good enough to be published.
The unfortunate truth of writing is that you won't know that until you finish.
But you have to become a writer who finishes what you start, even if you then
have to throw a whole completed project away once in a while. That is part of
the process of becoming a professional writer. You must figure out how to
FINISH every book you write.

So here’s the takeaway.

DON’T write a new book. FINISH the old
one.

I am pretty sure that what most aspiring authors need to be doing is using the
New Year, or Junowrimo, or Nanowrimo, wherever you are in the year, to FINISH
an old book.

Part of that process is picking the right premise to begin with. But another
critical part of that process is ramming your head into a concrete wall
(metaphorically speaking) until you're battered and bloody but you finally
figure out how to make that particular book work. Some books are just harder
than others, but you must demonstrate to the Universe that you are willing to
do whatever it takes to make ANY book work. It's a trust thing. Your books must
trust you to fully commit to them.

And that time is NEVER wasted, even if you never make money off that book. It
is professional and more importantly - CREATIVE development.

I have a book hidden in my files in the Cloud that I could be making quite a
lot of money on if I just self-published it, or even had my agent go for a traditional
publishing deal on it. People would buy it and a lot of readers would enjoy it.
One of my trusted Beta readers says it’s her favorite of all my books.

I know all that.

But for me
- it's not as good as the rest of my books and I don't want it out there.
It just doesn’t have the theme, the MEANING I want in my books.

I finished it, evaluated it—and then put it away
and wrote another.

That was a big gap in my publishing schedule,
let me tell you. Good thing I had some savings.

BUT—my next book wasHuntress Moon, a real breakthrough in my writing. It was the book and series I
was meant to write. The Huntress series combines my political and social
activism, my rage at the abuse of children and women and the plain fact that we
are not yet as a society committed to ENDING that abuse, and my skill at
working those issues into highly readable thrillers. Because I’ve written this
series, I honestly could die right now and feel that I’d fulfilled one crucial
thing I was meant to do on this planet.

So my putting that other book away? I don't
think that's a coincidence. I think my creative mind and the Universe
understood that I was finally ready to do more, mean more, with my writing.

So I beg you all, just as I am begging my workshop students. If you haven't
finished the book you're on, DON'T start a new book for Junowrimo, or
Nanowrimo, or the New Year, just because.

Commit to the book you're already writing, in whatever stage of the process
you're at, and finish THAT one.

And then go get published.
- Alex

(This week I heard from a good friend, a fabulous director and writing professor, who says she passed this post of mine on to a student of hers - who took the advice, FINISHED her book, and just landed an agent! Just saying....)

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